How the
Sanctions Hurt Iraq
Colin
Rowat
(Colin
Rowat is a lecturer in economics at the University of Birmingham,
UK.)
August
2, 2001 (updated 14 November 2001)
Over
May and June 2001, the US, British, French and Russian governments
all proposed alterations to the eleven-year old UN sanctions on
Iraq. Consensus was not reached, and the Security Council extended,
unmodified, the Oil for Food program that allows Iraq to sell its
oil to import civilian goods. As the extension expires in December,
the proposals for reforming the sanctions are likely to resurface
later this year. Since concerns about the sanctions often center
on their harm to Iraqi civilians, the economic and humanitarian
implications of the new proposals must be considered. The US-UK
proposal -- officially promoted as "smart sanctions" --
may have some positive effects on civilian life, but it fails to
address the current sanctions' major sources of harm. Sanctions,
of course, intentionally harm to obtain political gains; what those
gains might be is not considered here.
TWENTY
YEARS OF TRAUMA
The
past 20 years have been economically traumatic for Iraq. Almost
the entire Iraqi gross domestic product in the 1980s was consumed
by the 1980-88 war with Iran.[1]
War's end fueled Iraqis' expectations of rising prosperity, but
left the government deeply in debt, pursued by creditors and trying
to absorb a large conscript army into a diminished and distorted
civilian economy, dependent upon migrant labor and imports. The
government's austerity program, undertaken to reduce its debt, exacerbated
serious economic difficulties. Kuwait's violation of its OPEC quotas
helped lower oil prices significantly throughout 1990, worsening
the crisis. Iraq's subsequent invasion of Kuwait seems at least
partly a desperate bid to stave off economic collapse, by boosting
oil prices, securing new sources of revenue and signaling a tough
bargaining stance to other regional creditors.
The
gamble failed. Oil prices jumped 50 percent in August 1990 alone,
but sanctions kept the windfall out of Iraq's coffers. The ensuing
Gulf war destroyed more of Iraq's civilian infrastructure than had
years of war with Iran. A decade of sanctions imposed by the UN
Security Council has prevented any real economic recovery, both
directly and by politicizing economic and humanitarian issues.
At
first, the sanctions were nearly total. The Security Council granted
exemptions only to import "supplies intended strictly for medical
purposes, and, in humanitarian circumstances, foodstuffs".[2]
The Iraqi government rejected a prototype 'oil for food' program
later that year, in part because the proposed amounts of oil sales
were insufficient to restore Iraqi social services to pre-war levels.[3]
The Security Council consciously overrode then Secretary-General
Javier Pérez de Cuéllar's recommendation to permit
larger sales. For the next five years, Iraq traded on a largely
ad hoc basis, under a variety of arrangements approved by the UN
Sanctions Committee. In 1996, unable to stop the worsening humanitarian
crisis, the Iraqi government accepted a slightly larger Oil for
Food program. The Security Council has extended the program since
then, raising and then removing the cap on permitted oil sales,
extending permissible imports to include oil industry spare parts
and streamlining its procedures.
TODAY'S
CONSTRAINTS
The
sanctions directly reduce Iraq's potential exports and, hence, income.
Non-oil exports are forbidden. As such exports accounted for a small
share of Iraq's pre-sanctions exports, this prohibition may have
a small effect. Nevertheless, it reduces income and employment,
speeding the loss of skills among Iraq's workers and encouraging
their emigration.
In
theory, Oil for Food now permits unlimited oil exports. But in practice,
the Iraqi oil industry has decayed under sanctions. Peak production
under Oil for Food remains below the pre-sanctions peak (2.765 million
barrels per day instead of 3.5 million) and cannot be sustained
without large investments in equipment and skilled labor. Since
1998, Iraq's oil industry has ordered $2.5 billion of the $3.6 billion
in spare parts allowed it, and received $953 million of them.[4]
Given these limited inputs to date, UN oil experts report that the
industry "continues to face significant technical and infrastructural
problems, which unless addressed will inevitably result in the reduction
of crude oil production from the current levels".[5]
The
sanctions also cripple Iraq's once large public sector. Revenues
from Iraq's nationalized oil industry once paid public sector salaries,
something now forbidden. Increased smuggling and domestic taxes
cannot fully offset this loss, in part because Iraq's domestic tax
base remains small. As Iraq's military and security apparatus almost
certainly are paid first from these funds, the rest of the public
sector suffers the most from today's smaller budgets.
A
partial solution would be to pay Iraq's public sector with 'oil
for food' goods rather than cash; the Security Council would be
unlikely to approve this. Alternatively, the Iraqi government could,
and has, printed dinars to meet its obligations, but this spurs
inflation.
The
UN Secretary-General's Oil for Food reports hint at the effects.
The most recent warned of "pronounced disincentives to the
academic cadres," and noted that oil spare parts were piling
up.[6] Poorly paid teachers
and oil workers must supplement their small incomes, often at the
expense of full attention to their formal jobs. Similar problems
affect nurses, doctors, engineers, warehouse managers and other
civil servants. Working without proper equipment, often part-time,
their expensive skills decline. Some observers worry that the breakdown
in formal employment is breeding a culture of opportunism and corruption.
CIVILIAN
INFRASTRUCTURE
Civilian
infrastructure has suffered disproportionately from lack of maintenance
and investment. For example, Iraq's electrical sector is barely
holding production steady at one third its 1990 capacity even though
government expenditure in this sector consistently exceeds plans.[7]
Electrical shortages, worst during the hot summers, spoil food and
medicine and stop water purification, sewage treatment and irrigated
agriculture, interfering with all aspects of life. Last summer,
a power plant accident threatened a catastrophic failure of the
national grid.[8]
In
1991, the UN estimated that Iraq's electrical sector needed $12
billion [9] ($16 billion in
2001 dollars [10] to return
to pre-war levels. With depreciation and population growth, electrical
repairs alone could consume much of the $31 billion that Oil for
Food has generated for Iraq to date.[11]
While the Iraqi government has occasionally curtailed its UN-approved
oil sales and does have smuggling revenue, the point remains: Iraq's
productive capacity is such that restoring its civilian infrastructure
to pre-war levels will take a long time.
Foreign
investment, which could speed reconstruction, is forbidden by sanctions.
Even were it allowed, debt reduction would be necessary to attract
investors. Estimates of Iraq's pre-sanctions external debts vary,
but may now be $98 billion.[12]
A further $23 billion in damages for invading Kuwait has been assessed;
if the remaining $219 billion in claims are as successful as past
claims were, they will add another $73 billion.[13]
Even without the remaining claims, Iraq's debt is 380 percent of
its GDP [14], surpassed
only by Mozambique in the World Bank's ranking (which excludes Iraq).[15]
SANCTIONS
BUSTED
Perhaps
surprisingly, the sanctions do not seem to obstruct Iraq's import
of civilian goods. Jordan, Turkey, Iran and Syria bypass UN controls.
In Jordan's case, this dates to 1991, when independent economists
found little price difference between Jordan and Iraq for wheat
flour and other staple foods, meaning that it was not costly to
import goods across their border. [16]
Iraqi hardship is not a function of externally sealed borders, but
of the factors raised above, such as poverty and destruction of
civilian infrastructure. To impoverished Iraqis, the goods in Baghdad's
shops may be as unattainable as if they were on display in Amman.
Smuggling
is attractive to the extent that UN-permitted trade is not. For
security and political reasons, the Sanctions Committee often places
contracts for items that could be used to rebuild infrastructure
on hold. Potential suppliers may face inexplicable delays of uncertain
duration, interfering with their production plans. To ensure UN
control of Iraq's oil funds, the Committee also removes commercial
protection clauses from import contracts, leaving Iraq without recourse
if a contract's terms are violated. The Iraqi government could reduce,
but not remove, the commercial protection problem by contracting
more with reputable, rather than politically expedient, suppliers.
Apart
from the material harm done by sanctions, the perception that they
are harmful is itself harmful, reducing Iraqis' expectations and
therefore the government's incentives to meet them. Equally, the
indirect nature of sanctions' harm reduces pressure on Security
Council members to acknowledge responsibility for, and perhaps reduce,
their harmfulness.
"SMART
SANCTIONS"
The
US-UK proposal [17] for
self-proclaimed "smart sanctions" streamlines import procedures.
Potential imports currently fall into one of three categories: goods
subject to "fast track" approval, "dual-use"
items and other non-military items. The Sanctions Committee handles
items in the last two categories; the Office of the Iraq Program
processes those in the first. The US-UK proposal abolishes the third
category, dividing its domain between the remaining two. This plan
would also tighten border controls to reduce smuggling.
Neither
measure addresses the sanctions' principal means of harm. Its expansion
of the "fast track" is economically beneficial but likely
of limited significance: smuggling circumvented the sanctions as
early as 1991. Although "fast track" procedures began
in March 2000, their effect on the arrival of goods in Iraq is unknown.
The effect may be small as the "fast track" has largely
applied to goods not previously delayed by the Committee. Also,
the expansion of the "dual-use" category may worsen matters,
given the US history of using this category to block imports.
The
proposed tightened borders could have detrimental effects on Iraqi
civilians. As only 72 percent of Iraq's Oil for Food sales are used
to meet civilian needs (25 percent going to compensation claims
and 2.2 percent to UN expenses), converting smuggling to Oil for
Food trade could reduce the money available to meet them. A smuggled
dollar is also more flexible than an Oil for Food dollar: it can
pay salaries and other cash expenses, and can avoid the UN's potentially
costly procedures. These concerns can almost certainly be dismissed:
smuggled oil is usually sold at a discount, reducing the money that
it generates for Iraq; regime members, rather than the public, receive
much of the ensuing revenue; and reputable foreign companies may
avoid smuggling.
There
is a more likely side effect of reduced smuggling: Iraq's Kurdish
regional authorities risk losing revenue gained by smuggling diesel
from south-central Iraq to Turkey. However, as the Turkish and Iraqi
governments are discussing a direct trade route, this may occur
independently of UN proposals.
If,
in spite of these drawbacks, the US and UK successfully present
their proposal as ending sanctions' harm, the Iraqi government may
face heightened expectations to alleviate civilian suffering. Presumably,
the US and UK would then face less pressure to lighten sanctions'
burden.
The
US-UK proposal's economic and humanitarian consequences are highly
uncertain, but unlikely to be large. The French proposal [18]
goes further in reducing the sanctions' economic constraints: it
would give Iraq's oil industry cash to pay salaries and would permit
foreign investment; it sidelines tightening of the borders. The
Russian proposal [19] suspends
all non-military sanctions once weapons inspectors return to Iraq.
For better or worse, this proposal goes furthest towards ending
the sanctions' restrictions.
--------------------
The author can be contacted at c.rowat@bham.ac.uk.
The views expressed are not necessarily those of the University
of Birmingham.
FOOTNOTES
[1]
Alnasrawi, Abbas. The Economy of Iraq: Oil, Wars, Destruction
of Development and Prospects, 1950-2010. Greenwood Press, 1994.
p. 100.
[2]
Security Council Resolution 661. gopher://gopher.undp.org/00/undocs/scd/scouncil/s90/15,
6 August 1990. ¶ 3(c).
[3]
S/2279. Report to the Secretary-General dated 15 July 1991 on
humanitarian needs in Iraq prepared by a mission led by Sadruddin
Aga Khan, Executive Delegate of the Secretary-General, http://www.casi.org.uk/overflow/undocs/sadruddin1.pdf,
15 July 1991. ¶ 26.
[4]
Office of the Iraq Programme. Weekly Update (20 – 26 October
2001),
http://www.un.org/Depts/oip/latest/wu30Oct01.html, 30 October
2001 for data on oil spare parts ordered and arrived. The total
allowed oil spare parts allowed Iraq are $300 million per phase
in Phases IV and V and $600 million per phase in Phases VI to X.
[5]
S/2001/566. Report of the team of experts established pursuant
to paragraph 15 of Security Council resolution 1330 (2000),
http://www.un.org/Depts/oip/reports/s2001_566.pdf,
6 June 2001.
[6]
S/2001/505. Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to paragraph
5 of resolution 1330 (2000), http://www.un.org/Docs/sc/reports/2001/505e.pdf,
18 May 2001.
[7]
S/2001/505. Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to paragraph
5 of resolution 1330 (2000), http://www.un.org/Docs/sc/reports/2001/505e.pdf,
18 May 2001. ¶ 90.
[8]
S/2000/857. Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to paragraph
5 of resolution 1302 (2000), http://www.un.org/Docs/sc/reports/2000/857e.pdf,
8 September 2000. ¶ 36.
[9]
S/22799. Report to the Secretary-General dated 15 July 1991 on
humanitarian needs in Iraq prepared by a mission led by Sadruddin
Aga Khan, Executive Delegate of the Secretary-General, http://www.casi.org.uk/overflow/undocs/sadruddin1.pdf,
15 July 1991. In 1997-1998 the UNDP and the Iraqi Commission of
Electricity discussed a figure of $7 billion. This figure was later
included in S/1998/90 (http://www.un.org/Docs/sc/reports/1998/s199890.htm),
a 1 February 1998 supplementary report on Oil for Food. The author’s
UN sources suspect that the 1991 estimate is more accurate.
[10]
2001 figure generated with the US Bureau of Labor Statistics’
consumer price index calculator at http://www.bls.gov/cpi.
[11]
S/2001/919. Report of the Secretary-General pursuant to paragraph
5 of resolution 1360 (2001), http://www.un.org/Depts/oip/reports/S2001_919.pdf,
28 September 2001. Data from paragraphs 2(a), (b) of Annex I; euros
converted to dollars at 31 August 2001 rates.
[12]
In a report submitted on 29 April 1991 by the Iraqi government to
the UN Secretary-General the former declared its external debts
to be $42.1 billion as of 31 December 1990 and its annualised interest
rate to be eight percent (reprinted in Middle East Economic Survey
13 May 1991, D6 - D9). These data had not previously been published
by the Iraqi government, nor have they since. If they are correct,
and assuming an unchanged interest rate, Iraq's external debt would
have grown to $98 billion by 31 December 2001. Inclusion of loans
from Arab Gulf states, which the Iraqi government declared to have
been grants, would increase this figure. Recognition that some of
Iraq's debt may have been surreptitiously serviced under the sanctions
would decrease it. Another confound is Iraqi government interest
in overstating its foreign liabilities: these data were presented
to support the Iraqi government's claim that Iraq's economy was
unable to both service its debt and meet basic humanitarian needs
within Iraq.
Abbas
Alnasrawi, working from the same data, estimates Iraq's current
external debt to be $120 billion (“Oil, Sanctions, Debt and
the Future”, http://www.casi.org.uk/info/alnasrawi.html,
11 March 2001). The Economist Intelligence Unit estimates its foreign
debt to be $53 billion in 2000.
[13]
UN Compensation Commission.
http://www.unog.ch/uncc/status.htm, 24 October 2001 version.
The figure of $73 billion is calculated by the author by assuming
that the past award rate in each category of claims will continue
into the future.
[14]
The Economist Intelligence Unit estimates Iraq's nominal GDP at
$31.8 billion in 2000 (http://www.economist.com/countries/Iraq/profile.cfm?folder=Profile%2DEconomic%20Structure).
[15]
World Development Indicators. Net present value of external debt
as percentage of GDP (http://wbln0018.worldbank.org/psd/compete.nsf/27aa33e6034bee39852564900064e573?OpenView).
1996, 1997 data. Mozambique's ratio is 441%.
[16]
Drèze, Jean and Haris Gazdar. “Hunger and Poverty in
Iraq, 1991”, World Development, 20 (7), pp. 921-945,
1992.
[17]
20 June 2001 draft, http://www.casi.org.uk/info/ukdraftscr010620.html.
[18]
19 June 2001 draft, http://www.casi.org.uk/info/france010619a.html.
[19]
26 June 2001 draft, http://www.casi.org.uk/info/russiadraftscr010626.html.
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